The Split Second (18 page)

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Authors: John Hulme

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BOOK: The Split Second
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“How come we’re skipping
The Sixties
?” asked Becker, pulling the bulky disc out of its sleeve and placing it on the unoccupied spinner.

“From what I can tell, after she dropped out she pretty much hit the Road. Lived in Obscurity for a while, holed up in the Sticks, even spent a little time trying to find Herself.” Sully turned up the treble via one of the countless dials. “But when it came time to settle down, she picked a place where no one would think to look . . .”

Becker hit Play on the console and the needle swung out on a lever, resting ever so gingerly above the spinning disc.

“She was flirting with moving there all through the forties and fifties.” Sully was wearing two sets of phones so that
The
Fifties
was in one ear and
The Seventies
in the other. “But something tells me she didn’t pull the trigger until around ’73!”

He lowered the needle and, placing hands on both of the discs, began to slide them back and forward through Time. It was almost as if he were trying to find where one song perfectly transitioned into the other, and Becker had to admit that despite his unkempt beard and broken glasses (or because of them), he looked like a fresh DJ scratching on the 1s and 2s.

“Bingo!” Sully shouted triumphantly.

“You got it?”

“Of course I got it!” The Keeper turned off the turntable and hopped down off his stool. “And I promise you she’s still there!”

Before Becker could get a listen for himself, Sully was madly dashing toward the only other working piece of machinery in the Hall of Records—the old-fashioned Gramophone, which wasn’t playing anything, only recording.

“This is what’s happening right now . . .” He pointed to where the needle was cutting microscopic grooves into the face of the Record. “On first listen, it’s been a pretty rocky decade, but you can never tell until you hear it a few times.”

On the back of the Gramophone were RCA cables with the symbols of every department and sub-department in The Seems. There was also an “audio out” jack, and Sullivan affixed a one-eighths to one-fourth adapter and plugged in the cord.

“See if this rings a bell.”

When Becker pressed the cushiony leather of the headphone against his ear, he was hoping to hear the answer to the whereabouts of the one and only Time Being. But all that assaulted his ears was a hideous clamor.

“Dude, it’s totally garbled!”

“That’s because you’re not used to what life sounds like when it’s happening all at once.” Sully pushed up his glasses over the bridge of his nose. “Gimme two more seconds to isolate her track!”

Watching the Keeper of the Records madly adjust the knobs on the front of the machine did little to instill confidence in Fixer #37. Nor did the piles of white pages that were crudely stuffed into every drawer, box, and file cabinet in the hall. Sully continually brushed off inquiries about the papers by mumbling something about his “project,” which only served to increase Becker’s dread that he’d been sucked into a wild goose chase.

“Are you sure you found her?”

“One more second!”
screeched Linus from inside his cage. Though he and Sully were often at odds, he would never bite the hand that fed him.
“One more second!”

Becker was now
totally
convinced that he had stumbled into the loony bin—until suddenly the “music” in his ears came perfectly into sync. He could clearly hear the sound of horns honking, people shouting in many different languages, even a distant siren. And underneath it all, an exhilarating hum that vibrated through his body and made his adrenaline soar.

“I know where that is . . .” Becker also heard the sounds of quiet footsteps amid the hustle and bustle, and had the distinct sensation that he was listening through somebody else’s ears. “I totally know where that is!”

“Half The Seems has been looking for this woman for fifty years,” said Sully, proudly watching the realization dawn upon the Fixer’s face. “And she’s been right under their noses all this time!”

Becker allowed the headphones to fall around his neck, then quickly formulated a game plan. He would need a change of clothes—probably something black, so as not to stand out like a sore thumb. A replacement Toolkit would also be required, messenger-bag style. And lastly, he would have to score a fully loaded Metrocard. Because according to this Record, the Time Being was not hiding in any little out-of-the-way corner of The Seems . . .

She was living in New York City.

19
. The Department of Housing & Useless Development.

20
. You can catch Matt Rockman spinning discs every Thursday night from one a.m. to four a.m. on WVHP, Highland Park High School’s student-run radio station.

9

The Big Apple

Central Park, New York, New York

Becker Drane and Daniel J. Sullivan emerged from a Door that was marked with a leaf—perfectly imitating the seal of the NYC Parks Department—and stepped into the eight hundred and forty-three acres of rolling green known as Central Park. Sully immediately tried to shield his eyes from the bright sun, infused as it is with far more ultraviolet and infrared than that of The Seems. But even with his elbow above his forehead he couldn’t stop the sights and sounds of New York City from rushing in.

A Rollerblader blasted by, joyfully using the Fixer and Keeper of the Records as pylons in her obstacle course. Tall stone and glass buildings loomed over the park on all four sides, while the sounds of ambulances, jackhammers, and two men haggling over the price of a shish kebab melded together in a pop single worthy of one of Sully’s precious Records. In his adventures in The World and The Seems, Fixer #37 had been to many strange and out-of-the-way places, but none of them flooded all twelve of his senses
21
like this one.

“Welcome to the Big Apple, Sully.”

Sully was still a little shell-shocked, so Becker helped him over to a park bench. Persuading the older man to come to The World hadn’t been easy, for the Keeper was intent on getting back to his project, and besides, who would take care of Linus? But a quick call to Central Command had brought one of the Skeleton Crew to watch over History (along with the complete first season of
The Jinx Gnomes
for the obsessed parrot), and once Becker had declassified some of the details of his Mission, Sully finally agreed.

“You okay, dude?” asked Becker, seeing that his companion was trembling from head to toe. “Can I get you a water or a Diet Coke?”

“No, no. I’m fine.”

When Sully opened his eyes again, Becker could see that his comrade was not suffering from shock and awe, but rather from genuine emotion.

“It’s just . . .” Sully wiped a tear from the corner of his eye. “I forgot how beautiful it was.”

“When was the last time you came to The World?”

“For Y2K. I’ve been meaning to come back ever since, but I’ve been so focused on my project that I never had time.”

“Gotta stop and smell the roses, Sully.”

Becker laced up his suede Pumas and cuffed his replacement Levi’s just once. The Wardrobe Department had also hooked him up with a black Old Navy T-shirt and a nice pair of Vuarnets, but they had struggled to come up with something workable for the Keeper. Presently, he was stuffed into a white “I Love New York” T-shirt, red Adidas sweat pants, and clunky Doc Martens, which made him look like a cross between an outpatient from a mental hospital and a homeless man.

“Where did you say she lived again?” asked the Fixer.

“Let me double check.” Sully turned up the volume on the old-fashioned Sony Walkman that was clipped onto his pants. Inside the device was a dub of the last three years, and he listened intently, covering the orange foam headphones with his hands. “I heard her mention 274 West 12
th
Street on at least three occasions.”

“Then we’re gonna have to take the subway downtown.” Becker scanned the park for the closest passerby. “Hold on, let me ask somebody how we get there.”

A man in a business suit and sunglasses was in shouting distance.

“Excuse me, sir?”

The man just flipped a quarter at Becker and kept right on walking. The next two people he approached simply put up their hands and said, “I already believe in Jesus,” until finally, a mounted police officer was kind enough to tell him, “You need to take the 1 train to 14
th
Street, boss.” He pointed to the station entrance that was visible over the stone wall surrounding Central Park. “It’s right over there.”

Fourteenth Street was only two blocks away from where they believed the Time Being had been hiding for the last thirty-odd years, and if they were lucky she’d be home. And if they were
really
lucky, she’d be able to tell them how to put a Split Second back together. But even though the stakes for the Mission couldn’t be higher, Becker found himself embarrassed by the ragged sight of his traveling partner.

“And Sully?”

“Yeah?”

“I don’t want people to think we’re bridge and tunnelers
22
, so try to be cool.”

“Cool? I’m cool.” Sully was deeply offended. “Cool’s my middle name.”

But as the Keeper followed Becker toward Columbus Circle, he could feel the eyes of even the most jaded New Yorkers upon him.

“Correction. My middle name is Jehosephat.”

Meanwhile, The Seems

Briefer Shan Mei-Lin sat with her legs crossed in the cold and empty darkness. There was nary a sound nor a speck of light, nor even a hint of movement in the shadows (of which there were none, for shadows themselves can only be created by the presence of light). In fact, the only things that confirmed that she existed at all were the sound of her heartbeat—which she controlled via the Buddhist technique of anapanasati, or “mindfulness of breathing”—and the feel of the hard ground beneath her.

When she had first entered Meanwhile, panic had threatened to tear Shan apart, but the tutelage of IFR instructor Jelani Blaque had served her well. He implored his Candidates to view even the most mind-numbing terrors as Tools by which the innermost portions of one’s own self could be mapped and explored. Yet when she looked inside to see what she really was terrified by, it was not the fact that she was going to die in this black prison, but the fact that nobody would really care that she was gone.

“How is this possible?” the girl asked herself, resisting the impulse to wrap her arms around her knees. “I’ve always tried the best I could.”

This was undeniable. Her life had been one long succession of triumphs, all of which were memorialized on plaques and papers in two separate worlds for all to see. And yet, the distance she felt from those around her was also undeniable.

“You’ve become the best at the wrong game.”

Shan’s eyes opened with a start. She had definitely heard a voice, but she couldn’t tell if it had echoed from the darkness or from the corridors of her own head.

“Say that again?”

“I said you’re playing the wrong game.”

Shan knew that hearing voices was one of the telltale signs of dementia, but listening to something imaginary was better than nothing at all, so she decided to play along.

“Then what would be the right game?”

The voice went silent and Shan feared that she had asked too direct a question, but after a moment’s pause, it piped up again.

“A game where you’re playing for something other than your own high score.”

As always, the Briefer resented the implication that she had failed or even struggled with something, but she let the hot flash of anger pass before responding.

“I didn’t make the rules.”

“But you continue to play by them, at the expense of all else.”

Shan tried to fire back, but she couldn’t argue that in her endless drive to succeed and achieve, those around her—her fellow students, the Candidates at the IFR, even Fixers Chiappa and Drane—had become competitors (if not enemies) or fools that stood in her way. In fact, she could not think of a single person in the World or Seems whom she could honestly call her friend.

“And when was the last time you talked to your brother? Or to your mother and father?”

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